A woman whose estranged husband allegedly pretended to be a medic to lure women to his home for invasive medical exams that he secretly filmed discovered evidence of the sickening scam as she searched for Christmas decorations, police have revealed.

Kimberly Gavin-Anderson uncovered a trove of medical pamphlets, supplies, small surveillance cameras and questionnaires filled out by David E. Anderson's victims and contacted police.

It came after she had already tipped off authorities after finding nude images of her nieces, aged 10 to 13, on his computer in a folder entitled 'Family and Friends', police said.

The images were taken as the unsuspecting young girls
used a bathroom at Anderson's beach house in Salisbury, Massachusetts over the summer.

In court: David Anderson, left, allegedly filmed women undergoing invasive procedures after claiming he was a medic. He is also accused of hiding cameras to film his young nieces in the nude

After that report, Salisbury police obtained a
search warrant for his computers and, with the help of FBI and state
police, allegedly uncovered 'thousands' of video of the girls.

In searching the home,
police also found two external hard drives that contained videos of the
'medical examinations' with time stamps as early as 2008, Chief Tom Fowler told the Boston Herald.

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The father-of-one is being held on $500,000 bail following his arraignment on Monday on charges of unlawfully recording a nude or
partially nude person and possession of child pornography.

Anderson allegedly recruited women through Craigslist and distributed fliers through the community offering to pay between $25 and $50 to be examined by medical students for research, the Newburyport Daily Newsreported.

Discovery: Anderson's stash of thousands of images and film was found after his estranged wife, Kimberly Gavin-Anderson, right, found them in a computer file entitled 'Family and Friends'